Crisis, Austerity, and Transformation

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A32=Carla Guapo Costa
A32=Dora Fonseca
A32=Giovanni Allegretti
A32=Isabel David
A32=Mafalda Esteves
A32=Marcos Farias Ferreira
A32=Maria João Ferreira
A32=Pedro Fonseca
A32=Ricardo Campos
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austerity
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bailout
Category1=Non-Fiction
Category=JP
COP=United States
Crisis
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economy
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international relations
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political economy
Portugal
Portuguese economy
Portuguese political system
Portuguese social movements
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softlaunch

Product details

  • ISBN 9781498543873
  • Weight: 499g
  • Dimensions: 158 x 239mm
  • Publication Date: 22 Jan 2018
  • Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
  • Language: English
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Discussions of the recent austerity measures in Southern Europe as a response to the sovereign debt crisis have been usually framed in terms of their economic impact. However, the general impoverishment of these countries has induced other massive social and political changes, a fact which is ignored in the literature. This volume seeks to fill this gap and break ground by analyzing these trends in the Portuguese context.
Portugal has been portrayed as the Troika’s good pupil by obediently adopting all prescribed austerity measures. In the process, the nation’s fragile social fabric has been destroyed. Massive emigration, particularly by young people, massive increases in poverty and a foundering economy have triggered a collective framing of the crisis and austerity as unjust and punitive of a collectivity that, at the beginning, naively believed in the neoliberal narrative of the benign effects of the cuts. This reframing unleashed an unprecedented wave of social and political mobilization in an otherwise traditionally apathetic society. This resistance needs to be addressed as a direct effect of austerity policies and properly analyzed for what it really represents: a process of repoliticization and re-democratization sweeping Europe. These mobilizations include direct democracy experiments, the growing influence of social movements (the massive March 2011 demonstrations were a direct inspiration for the creation of the Indignado movement in Spain, attesting the contagion effect), solidarity economy and the major political change in the country’s 42 years of democratic rule: an alliance of the left parties, unthinkable before the crisis, and which is reframing relations with the European Union.
This volume offers a first approach to the massive political, social and cultural transformations taking place in the country that make Portugal, in certain aspects, a lab for innovative practices (e.g. participatory budgets and the alliance of the left parties) that may be used elsewhere as alternatives to current understandings of economic and political orthodoxy

Isabel David is assistant professor at the School of Social and Political Sciences, University of Lisbon.